Title: LITERATURE REVIEW
1LITERATURE REVIEW
2What is LR?
- A literature review discusses published
information in a particular subject area, and
sometimes information in a particular subject
area within a certain time period. - A literature review can be just a simple summary
of the sources, but it usually has an
organizational pattern and combines both summary
and synthesis.
3What is LR?
- It involves the systematic identification,
location and analysis of documents containing
information related to the research problem
4What is LR?
- A summary is a recap of the important information
of the source, but a synthesis is a
re-organization, or a reshuffling, of that
information. - It might give a new interpretation of old
material or combine new with old interpretations.
- Or it might trace the intellectual progression of
the field, including major debates. - And depending on the situation, the literature
review may evaluate the sources and advise the
reader on the most pertinent or relevant.
5What is LR?
- The format of a review of literature may vary
from discipline to discipline and from assignment
to assignment. - A review may be a self-contained unit -- an end
in itself -- or a preface to and rationale for
engaging in primary research. A review is a
required part of grant and research proposals and
often a chapter in theses and dissertations. - Generally, the purpose of a review is to analyze
critically a segment of a published body of
knowledge through summary, classification, and
comparison of prior research studies, reviews of
literature, and theoretical articles.
6What is LR?
- A literature review is the effective evaluation
of selected documents on a research topic. - A review may form an essential part of the
research process or may constitute a research
project in itself. - In the context of a research paper or thesis the
literature review is a critical synthesis of
previous research. - The evaluation of the literature leads logically
to the research question.
7What is LR?
8Why write LR?
- The major purpose is to determine what has
already been done that relates to your problem - It points out research strategies and specific
procedures and measuring instruments that have
been used - Facilitate interpretation of the results of the
study
9Why write LR?
- Heavily researched areas usually provide enough
references directly related to a specific problem
to eliminate the need for relying on less related
studies - New or little researched problem areas require
review of any study related in some eanigful way
to the problem in order to develop a logical
framework and a sound rational Ha
10Why write LR?
- Literature reviews provide you with a handy guide
to a particular topic. If you have limited time
to conduct research, literature reviews can give
you an overview or act as a stepping stone. - Literature reviews also provide a solid
background for a research paper's investigation.
Comprehensive knowledge of the literature of the
field is essential to most research papers.
11Why write LR?
- For professionals, they are useful reports that
keep them up to date with what is current in the
field. - For scholars, the depth and breadth of the
literature review emphasizes the credibility of
the writer in his or her field
12Why write LR?
- The purpose of a literature review is for you to
take a critical look at the literature (facts and
views) that already exists in the area you are
researching. - A literature review is not a shopping list of
everything that exists, but a critical analysis
that shows an evaluation of the existing
literature and a relationship between the
different works. - It demonstrates the relevance of the research.
13Why write LR?
- Literature can include books, journal articles,
internet (electronic journals), newspapers,
magazines, theses and dissertations, conference
proceedings, reports, and documentaries. - Literature reviews are written occasionally in
the humanities, but mostly in the sciences and
social sciences in experiment and lab reports,
they constitute a section of the paper. - Sometimes a literature review is written as a
paper in itself.
14Why write LR?
- In the context of a research paper on a thesis,
the literature review provides a background to
the study being proposed. - The background may consider one or more of the
following aspects depending on the research
question being posed - Theoretical background past, present or future
- Clinical practice previous or contemporary
- Methodology and/or research methods
- Previous findings
- Rationale and/or relevance of the current study
15Why write LR?
- In a broader context Hart (1998) lists the
following purposes of a review - Distinguishing what has been done from what needs
to be done - Discovering important variables relevant to the
topic - Synthesising and gaining a new perspective
- Identifying relationships between ideas and
practice - Establishing the context of the topic or problem
16Why write LR?
- Rationalising the significance of the problem
- Enhancing and acquiring the subject vocabulary
- Understanding the structure of the subject
- Relating ideas and theory to applications
- Identifying methodologies and techniques that
have been used - Placing the research in a historical context to
show familiarity with state-of-the-art
developments.
17Why write LR?
- Its purpose is to
- Place each work in the context of its
contribution to the understanding of the subject
under review - Describe the relationship of each work to the
others under consideration - Identify new ways to interpret, and shed light on
any gaps in, previous research - Resolve conflicts amongst seemingly contradictory
previous studies - Identify areas of prior scholarship to prevent
duplication of effort - Point the way forward for further research
- Place one's original work (in the case of theses
or dissertations) in the context of existing
literature
18WHAT IS THE LITERATURE?
The literature" means the works you consulted in
order to understand and investigate your research
problem. In other words, the literature review is
a critical look at the existing research that is
significant to the work that you are carrying
out.
- How useful are the following sources (Literature
search)? - Journals
- Books
- Conference
- Report
- Newspapers
- Thesis
- Internet
- CD-ROM
- Magazines
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23Tips for performing literature search
- Note interesting quotes and their references
as you go along - Use outstanding review articles
- Reference correctly from the start
- Organize material you read
- Start with a broad search before you focus
24Outstanding Review Article
From outstanding publisher. Journal ACM,
IEEE, Elsevier, Springer, Kluwer, Taylor
Francis, IEICE, MIT, IOS Press, Pergamon,
WorldScientific, dll.
25Sequence of abstracts/indexes
- (Engineering, Science Technology)
- Science Citation Index (SCI, SCI Expanded)
- CompuMaths Citation Index
- Current Contents (Engineering, Computing,
Technology) - Cambridge Scientific Abstracts
- Computer Abstracts UK, CompuSci
- Mathematics Review USA
- Mathematics Abstracts Germany
- DBLP Bibliography
- INSPEC
- 503 journals are indexed/abstracted by SCI/SCI Exp
26WHY WRITE A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE?
It is not supposed to be just a summary of other
people's work! You evaluate relevant research
work, show the relationships between different
work, and show how it relates to your work ( what
work has already been done in your research
area). Show how it relates to the other work
(e.g. What other methodologies have been used?
How are they similar? How are they different?)
and show how it relates to your work (what is its
relationship to your methodology?). The
spectrum of the related issues
27WHY WRITE A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE?
28HOW CAN I WRITE A GOOD LITERATURE REVIEW?
Remember the purpose it should answer the 10
questions. Look at how published writers review
the literature. You'll see that you should use
the literature to explain your research - after
all, you are not writing a literature review just
to tell your reader what other researchers have
done. Your aim should be to show why your
research needs to be carried out, how you came to
choose certain methodologies or theories to work
with, how your work adds to the research already
carried out, etc.
Read with a purpose you need to summarize the
work you read but you must also decide which
ideas or information are important to your
research (so you can emphasize them), and which
are less important and can be covered briefly or
left out of your review. You should also look for
the major concepts, conclusions, theories,
arguments etc. that underlie the work, and look
for similarities and differences with closely
related work. This is difficult when you first
start reading, but should become easier the more
you read in your area.
29Cont..
Write with a purpose your aim should be to
evaluate and show relationships between the work
already done (Is Researcher Y's theory more
convincing than Researcher X's? Did Researcher X
build on the work of Researcher Y?) and between
this work and your own. In order to do this
effectively you should carefully plan how you are
going to organize your work.
30Example of the spectrum of issues or problems
year model advantage disadvantage
1994 Agrawal Apriori algorithm 1st and workable Bottleneck, due too many candidate itemset generated, needs huge memory and storage
2000 zaki Lattice theory Avoidance of generating redundant AR Cannot support frequent itemset with lower thresholds, less storage
2000 Yang et. al Binary Trie Less memory requirements Difficult to be updated whenever the database changes
2001 Coenen et al. Improve binary trie Requires another step to obtain the actual support count of an itemset
31Example for issues and problems
year model advantage disadvantage
2000 J. Han et. al. FP-growth using FP-tree to generate frequent itemset No need candidate generation. Good for low support thresholds
2004 SOTrieITs Enhancement of FP-growth Good performance and support threshold independence, can incrementally updated when new transactions arrives. Only for two levels
32TRAPS
33TRAPS
34Notice how the writers have
grouped similar information "Steudell 13,
Tanchoco and Agee14, Tanchoco et al. 15 and
Grasso and Tanchoco 5 studied various aspects
of this subject."
shown the relationship between the work of
different researchers, showing similarities/differ
ences "The general results, reflecting the
stochastic nature of the flow of goods, are
similar to those reported by Rosenblatt and Roll
12."
indicated the position of the work in the
research area history "Early work by Hausman,
Schwarz and Graves 6, 7 . . . "
moved from a general discussion of the research
in AS/RS to the more specific area (optimal
container size) that they themselves are
researching i.e. they relate previous work to
their own to define it, justify it and explain it.
35What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Clarify
- If your assignment is not very specific, seek
clarification from your supervisor/lecturer - Roughly how many sources should you include?
- What types of sources (books, journal articles,
websites)? - Should you summarize, synthesize, or critique
your sources by discussing a common theme or
issue? - Should you evaluate your sources?
- Should you provide subheadings and other
background information, such as definitions
and/or a history?
36What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Find models
- Look for other literature reviews in your area of
interest or in the discipline and read them to
get a sense of the types of themes you might want
to look for in your own research or ways to
organize your final review. You can simply put
the word "review" in your search engine along
with your other topic terms to find articles of
this type on the Internet or in an electronic
database. The bibliography or reference section
of sources you've already read are also excellent
entry points into your own research.
37What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Narrow your topic
- There are hundreds or even thousands of articles
and books on most areas of study. The narrower
your topic, the easier it will be to limit the
number of sources you need to read in order to
get a good survey of the material. Your
instructor will probably not expect you to read
everything that's out there on the topic, but
you'll make your job easier if you first limit
your scope.
38What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Consider whether your sources are current
- Some disciplines require that you use information
that is as current as possible. In the sciences,
for instance, treatments for medical problems are
constantly changing according to the latest
studies. Information even two years old could be
obsolete.
39What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- However, if you are writing a review in the
humanities, history, or social sciences, a survey
of the history of the literature may be what is
needed, because what is important is how
perspectives have changed through the years or
within a certain time period. - Try sorting through some other current
bibliographies or literature reviews in the field
to get a sense of what your discipline expects. - You can also use this method to consider what is
"hot" and what is not.
40What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Find a focus
- A literature review, like a term paper, is
usually organized around ideas, not the sources
themselves as an annotated bibliography would be
organized. This means that you will not just
simply list your sources and go into detail about
each one of them, one at a time. - No.
41What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- As you read widely but selectively in your topic
area, consider instead what themes or issues
connect your sources together. - Do they present one or different solutions?
- Is there an aspect of the field that is missing?
- How well do they present the material and do they
portray it according to an appropriate theory? - Do they reveal a trend in the field?
- A raging debate?
- Pick one of these themes to focus the
organization of your review.
42What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Construct a working thesis statement
- Then use the focus you've found to construct a
thesis statement. Yes! Literature reviews have
thesis statements as well! However, your thesis
statement will not necessarily argue for a
position or an opinion rather it will argue for
a particular perspective on the material.
43What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Some sample thesis statements for literature
reviews are as follows - The current trend in treatment for congestive
heart failure combines surgery and medicine. - More and more cultural studies scholars are
accepting popular media as a subject worthy of
academic consideration.
44What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Consider organization
- You've got a focus, and you've narrowed it down
to a thesis statement. - Now what is the most effective way of presenting
the information? - What are the most important topics, subtopics,
etc., that your review needs to include? - And in what order should you present them?
45What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Develop an organization for your review at both a
global and local level - First, cover the basic categories
- Just like most academic papers, literature
reviews also must contain at least three basic
elements an introduction or background
information section the body of the review
containing the discussion of sources and,
finally, a conclusion and/or recommendations
section to end the paper.
46What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Introduction Gives a quick idea of the topic of
the literature review, such as the central theme
or organizational pattern. - Body Contains your discussion of sources and is
organized either chronologically, thematically,
or methodologically (see below for more
information on each). - Conclusions/Recommendations Discuss what you
have drawn from reviewing literature so far.
Where might the discussion proceed?
47What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- The introduction should provide the reader with
the scale and structure of your review. It serves
as a kind of map. - The body of the review depends on how you have
organised your key points. Literature reviews at
postgraduate level should be evaluative and not
merely descriptive. For example possible reasons
for similarities or differences between studies
are considered rather than a mere identification
of them. - The conclusion of the review needs to sum up the
main findings of your research into the
literature. The findings can be related to the
aims of the study you are proposing to do. The
reader is thus provided with a coherent
background to the current study.
48What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Organizing the body
- Once you have the basic categories in place, then
you must consider how you will present the
sources themselves within the body of your paper.
Create an organizational method to focus this
section even further. - To help you come up with an overall
organizational framework for your review,
consider the six typical ways of organizing the
sources into a review - Chronological
- By publication
- By trend
- Thematic
- Methodological
- Questions for Further Research
49What should I do before writing the literature
review?
- Similar to primary research, development of the
literature review requires four stages - Problem formulationwhich topic or field is being
examined and what are its component issues? - Literature searchfinding materials relevant to
the subject being explored - Data evaluationdetermining which literature
makes a significant contribution to the
understanding of the topic - Analysis and interpretationdiscussing the
findings and conclusions of pertinent literature
50What should you write?
- the accepted facts in the area
- the popular opinion
- the main variables
- the relationship between concepts and variables
- shortcomings in the existing findings
- limitations in the methods used in the existing
findings - the relevance of your research
- suggestions for further research in the area.
51What should you write?
- Literature reviews should comprise the following
elements - An overview of the subject, issue or theory under
consideration, along with the objectives of the
literature review - Division of works under review into categories
(e.g. those in support of a particular position,
those against, and those offering alternative
theses entirely) - Explanation of how each work is similar to and
how it varies from the others - Conclusions as to which pieces are best
considered in their argument, are most convincing
of their opinions, and make the greatest
contribution to the understanding and development
of their area of research
52What should you write?
- In assessing each piece, consideration should be
given to - ProvenanceWhat are the author's credentials? Are
the author's arguments supported by evidence
(e.g. primary historical material, case studies,
narratives, statistics, recent scientific
findings)? - ObjectivityIs the author's perspective
even-handed or prejudicial? Is contrary data
considered or is certain pertinent information
ignored to prove the author's point? - PersuasivenessWhich of the author's theses are
most/least convincing? - ValueAre the author's arguments and conclusions
convincing? Does the work ultimately contribute
in any significant way to an understanding of the
subject?
53What should you write?
- Layout
- Make your literature review have an academic and
professional appearance. Here are some points to
make the look of your report appealing to the
reader - White space leave space between sections,
especially from the abstract. This gives an
uncluttered effect. - Headings/sub-headings these help to separate
ideas. - Text boxes you can use these for quotations or
paraphrasing to separate them from the rest of
your text. It is also pleasing to the eye.
54What should you write?
- Graphics centre your graphics, such as diagrams
or tables, to have space around them. Try not to
bury graphics in your text. - Pagination you can number pages or sections or
both, but the important thing to do is to be
consistent. The cover page normally is not
numbered. The content page and abstract page
usually have a separate numbering system to the
body of your literature review.
55What should you write?
- Language focus
- Create a balance between direct quotation
(citation) and paraphrasing. Avoid too much
direct quoting. The verb tense chosen depends on
your emphasis - When you are citing a specific author's findings,
use the past tense (found, demonstrated) - When you are writing about an accepted fact, use
the present tense (demonstrates, finds) and - When you are citing several authors or making a
general statement, use the present perfect tense
(have shown, have found, little research has been
done).
56What should you write?
- Final checklist
- Have I fulfilled the purpose of the literature
review? - Is it written at a level appropriate to its
audience? - Are its facts correct?
- Is all the information included relevant?
- Are the layout and presentation easy on the eye?
- Is the language clear, concise and academic?
- Does the abstract summarise the entire review?
- Does the introduction adequately introduce the
topic? - Is the body organised logically?
- Does the conclusion interpret, analyse and
evaluate? - Are the recommendations reasonable?
- Does the table of contents correspond with the
actual contents? Are page numbers correct? - Have I acknowledged all sources of information
through correct referencing? - Have I checked spelling, grammar and punctuation?
- Have I carefully proof-read the final draft?
57How to review?
- The whole process of reviewing includes
- a. Searching for literatureb. Sorting and
prioritising the retrieved literaturec.
Analytical reading of papersd. Evaluative
reading of paperse. Comparison across studiesf.
Organising the contentg. Writing the review
58How to review?
- Comparison across studies
- The aim is to extract key points by comparing and
contrasting ACROSS studies, instead of reading
one paper after another. - Key points for a review may concern areas of
similarities and/or differences in - Research aim(s) or hypotheses
- Research design and sampling
- Instruments and procedures used
- How data were analysed
- Results or findings
- Interpretations
59How to review?
- Find similarities and differences between studies
at different levels, e.g. - - philosophy- epistemology- morality-
methodology- methods- types of data- data
analysis- interpretation
60How to review?
- Set out your thinking on paper through maps and
trees.
61How to review?
62How to review?
- Pitfalls
- - Vagueness due to too much or
- inappropriate generalisations- Limited
range- Insufficient information- Irrelevant
material- Omission of contrasting view-
Omission of recent work
63Sources
- Education index
- Periodical literature
- Disserattion abstract international
- Psychological abstract
- Educational resources information center
- Book
- Computer search
64Example
- Early works have addressed some of the problems
and issues discussed in video retrieval.
Researchers have developed ideas and tools for
supporting video editing, for example in 8.
They have defined a seamless video editing in the
gradient domain. The spatio-temporal gradient
fields of target videos are modified or mixed to
generate a new gradient field, which is usually
not integrate able. They have also described how
semantic information about video can be
structured and used for content-based access.
From a general video archive point of view, the
problem with this tool is the lack of support for
managing video document structures. A digital
video archive serving different categories of
users should offer a more structured way of
describing video contents
65Example
- Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) are statistical
tools that have been used successfully in
modelling difficult tasks such as speech
recognition 15 or biological sequence analysis
16. Inspired by a similar speech application,
Hidden Markov model (HMM) has also been applied
to activity recognition. The first approach for
the human movements based on HMMs was described
in 13. It distinguished between six different
tennis strokes. This system divided the image
into meshes and counted the number of pixels
representing the person for each mesh. The
numbers were composed to a feature vector that
was converted into a discrete label by a vector
quantizer. The labels were classified based on
discrete HMMs. In 8, an HMM is used as a
representation of simple actions which are
recognized by computing the probability that the
model produces the visual observation sequence.
In 14 layered HMMs were proposed to model
single person office activities at various time
granularities
66Example
- Most of the existing work relies on using only a
single source of information (example, either
audio or visual track data alone). In 4, the
average video shot activity and the duration are
used as features for the categorization of movies
according to the actions. An action scene was
characterized by temporally localized properties
of video shots which have little or no recurring
similar visual contents 5. Although these
visual characters are undoubtedly good indicators
of rapidly evolving action contents, they are not
enough to determine the desired action. On the
other hand, audio-based action detection was
independently performed on the sound track in
6. However, this audio alone method may lead to
many potential false detected cases because many
sounds often mix different noises and other
similar background sound.
67Example
FIGURE 2.3 Schematic diagram for video
classification Source L.N. Abdullah et al. 2005.
68Example